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How to Survive (& Thrive) in 2009

How to Survive (& Thrive) in 2009. The Luxury Marketing Council of SF 02.25.09. How to Survive (& Thrive) in 2009. The state of the marketplace Consumer confidence (NYT/CBS News Poll. Feb. 2009)

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How to Survive (& Thrive) in 2009

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  1. How to Survive (& Thrive) in 2009 The Luxury Marketing Council of SF 02.25.09

  2. How to Survive (& Thrive) in 2009 The state of the marketplace • Consumer confidence (NYT/CBS News Poll. Feb. 2009) • How would you rate the condition of the national economy these days?... 91% fairly bad or very bad • How concerned are you that someone in your household may be out of work in the next 12 months? … 64% very or somewhat concerned

  3. How to Survive (& Thrive) in 2009 The state of the marketplace • Consumer confidence “Confidence grows at the rate a coconut tree grows. It falls at the rate a coconut falls” Montek Ahluwalia India Planning Commission

  4. How to Survive (& Thrive) in 2009 The state of the marketplace • Consumer confidence In early 2007, the Royal Bank of Scotland led a consortium that included the Fortis Group of Belgium and Santander of Spain. It paid $100 billion to acquire the Dutch bank ABN Amro. Had they held on to their $100 billion they could now buy Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Merrill Lynch, Deutsche Bank and Barclays…with enough left over to buy Ford, GM and Chrysler

  5. How to Survive (& Thrive) in 2009 The state of the marketplace • Employment • In the last four months of 2008, employment fell by 1.9 million…and continues at a rate of 500,000 a month • Of the 30 companies in the DJIA, 22 have announced job cuts since October 2008 • Unemployment is up in all 50 states • Lay-offs are taking place in high and low-tech industries • The December 2008 job loss in retailing is the worst since 1939

  6. How to Survive (& Thrive) in 2009 The state of the marketplace • Real estate • The new home sales rate has fallen to its all-time low since record-keeping began in 1963 • Foreclosures will continue as resets occur • There are 5,227 troubled, potentially-troubled or lender-possessed commercial assets in the U.S. valued at $124 billion

  7. How to Survive (& Thrive) in 2009 The state of the marketplace • Retail • 148,000 stores closed in 2008 • 73,000 projected to close in 2009 • January same store sales (ex Wal-Mart) declined 4.8% • Saks tumbled nearly 24% • J. C. Penny off 16.4 % • The Gap down by 23%

  8. How to Survive (& Thrive) in 2009 The state of the marketplace • Retail • Keys to survival • Marketing to teens/young adults, e.g., Buckle, Forever 21 • Luxury within limits, e.g., Coach • Family-friendly, e.g., PetSmart, BestBuy, GameStop. • Deeper discounting, e.g., Macy’s, Wal-Mart • Uniqueness and interactivity, e.g., Apple, Sephora

  9. How to Survive (& Thrive) in 2009 The state of the marketplace • Hospitality and tourism • Projected 8% decline in tourism-related spending in 2009 in SF • 7% of business meetings planned for 2009 have already cancelled in the U.S. • Hotel occupancy rate fell to 47.3% in the U.S. as at January 2009

  10. How to Survive (& Thrive) in 2009 The state of the marketplace • Dining • Significant declines: • Eating out less often • Trading down • Splitting the entrees • Drinking cheaper wine • Even iconic NYC restaurants are offering 5.00 PM specials and less expensive menu offerings • Reservations are now available at The French Laundry

  11. How to Survive (& Thrive) in 2009 What does the luxury customer say? (Source: Luxury Institute) • For wealthy consumers, superior quality (82%), superior craftsmanship (78%) and superior customer service (60%) are the top three requirements of a luxury brand. Yet, more than one-third of consumers say luxury brands are worse today than in the recent past on delivering superior customer service

  12. How to Survive (& Thrive) in 2009 What does the luxury customer say? • Half of consumers earning more than $200k annually and 46% of those with a net worth more than $1 million think luxury brands are becoming commodities • 64% of wealthy consumers believe luxury goods prices are too high relative to the value they deliver

  13. How to Survive (& Thrive) in 2009 What does the luxury customer say? • 43% of wealthy consumers say they are becoming more practical in their luxury purchases, are becoming more budget conscious (43%) and are purchasing more of what they need rather than what they want (30%)

  14. How to Survive (& Thrive) in 2009 What does the luxury customer say? • 62% of wealthy consumers say that the current state of the economy has changed their view of the luxury industry. When asked why, the cite the following: • Becoming more budget-conscious and prudent • The need to re-think and re-prioritize • A strong feeling that luxury goods are too "mass" vs. price • A sense that flaunting luxury at this time is insensitive • A desire to help others rather than spend on themselves.

  15. How to Survive (& Thrive) in 2009 What does the luxury customer say? • A majority of wealthy consumers state that they like to buy luxury items for the quality, because they last longer and keep their value (77%), and that they buy expensive items for their own pleasure, not to show off (72%).

  16. How to Survive (& Thrive) in 2009 What does the luxury customer say? • 50% of luxury consumers cited “discounts” and “sales” as a major influencing factor in making luxury purchases, and more than half of wealthy consumers state that they are likely to respond to a special offer or sale from a luxury brand more than any other factor

  17. How to Survive (& Thrive) in 2009 The bottom line? • 2009 will hurt (all year)…and expect the pain to last for 24-36 months • But we can survive and succeed • This is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to capitalize on fear and hesitancy of others and carve out market share (Market Darwinism)

  18. How to Survive (& Thrive) in 2009 What’s the strategy in a nutshell? • It’s “return to basics” time • It’s back to one-on-one, hand-to-hand, relationship building and development with our key customers • We must deliver value…Where’s the deal? What’s the value-add? • The singular focus…drive sales revenue and cash flow • Be obsessive about cutting unnecessary expense

  19. How to Survive (& Thrive) in 2009 What’s the strategy in a nutshell? • Prep your staff for double-duty. The easy days are over • Use the time to prepare for the turnaround • Use the occasion to make the decisions and take the actions that you lacked the courage to do before

  20. What’s the action plan? 1. Focus on your best, most loyal customers Remind them that you love them Call, visit, write Develop a plan 2. Consider new niches LGBT African-American Hispanic Greenies Culinary How to Survive (& Thrive) in 2009

  21. How to Survive (& Thrive) in 2009 3. Use the time to build a robust CRM system. Use it to invest more aggressively  in one-to-one "with permission" e-marketing 4. Segment your customer base (by historical spending and behaviors in the market) and market to best customers more surgically 5. Experiment with new products and services 6. Solicit new partnerships and collaborations with kindred brands 7. Revisit the status of your Customer Service component. Highlight its quality

  22. How to Survive (& Thrive) in 2009 8. Personalize and customize the transaction and experience as much as possible 9. Employ a Simplicity Marketing approach to brand promise, information and delivery 10. Engage in constant communication with your customer and prospect base 11. Re-organize the sales function • External Organization • Compensation • Incentive • Bonuses

  23. How to Survive (& Thrive) in 2009 13. Spend more on online options and ecommerce • Update your website (front and back ends) • Get familiar with on-line marketing tools (social networking, e-blasts, etc.) 14. Learn to react and respond to short-term customer buying decisions. The time frame is collapsing 15. Build an “experiential” halo over your brand, product and service 16. Package a value-added “accessory” in the deal 17. Lighten up on contractual terms and agreements without devaluing the currency

  24. How to Survive (& Thrive) in 2009 18. Position your product or service as gift-giving option 19. Provide buyer incentives, e.g., referrals, multi-year commitments, bounce-backs, loyalty programs etc. 20. Host more intimate, special events for top customers and their friends 21. Place more emphasis on PR to generate third-party testimonials

  25. How to Survive (& Thrive) in 2009 22. In advertising… • Continue to buy…but buy smarter • Focus strategy and execution • Migrate advertising investment to more niche media • Change the message so that it drives a call-to-action, namely buying your product

  26. How to Survive (& Thrive) in 2009 23. If forced to cut marketing expense, cut the accumulated fat but never cut into the muscle or sever an artery: • Excessive client/customer meals and entertainment … they don’t expect it anymore • Seasonal gifts • Unnecessary travel. Use videoconferencing • Attendance at marginal trade shows • The perks…subscriptions, clubs, etc • Expensive collateral materials that are often out-of-date the minute they come off the printing press • Consultants who contribute little to the marketing ROI

  27. How to Survive (& Thrive) in 2009 Closing advice • 2009 will be a brutal and bloody year in every business category and for every demographic buying group • Survival and success can be guaranteed • Return to the basics • Don’t over-react…don’t cut wantonly • Don’t make a spending decision without demanding ROI and accountability • Prepare NOW for the inevitable up-tick

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